Ginger Sesame Garlic Shrimp

In a hurry? I get it. Some days there just isn’t enough time to get everything done that needs to be done!

Those days are the reason I keep a bag of shrimp in the freezer. Shrimp quickly defrost in cold water and cook in only a few minutes.

My favorite way to cook shrimp is to stir-fry it, just barely enough to cook it through. Too much cooking and you end up with something rubbery and dry.

This stir-fry shrimp is perfect for a quick midweek meal. You marinate the shrimp in a soy sauce mixture with ginger, sesame oil, garlic, and rice vinegar, and then cook it on almost-smoking high heat for just a couple of minutes.

Toss with some sliced green onions, sprinkle with sesame seeds and you’re done! Great with rice, noodles, spinach or bok choy.

Ginger Sesame Garlic Shrimp Recipe

To easily thaw frozen shrimp, place in a large bowl of water with ice cubes.

Ingredients

Marinade:

1/4 cup soy sauce (use gluten-free soy sauce for gluten-free version)

2 Tbsp seasoned rice vinegar

2 teaspoons brown sugar

2 Tbsp olive oil

1 teaspoon dark sesame oil

3 cloves garlic, minced (about 1 Tbsp)

1 Tbsp grated ginger

Shrimp:

1 pound 16-20 count shrimp, peeled and deveined

1 Tbsp canola, rice bran, or peanut oil, or some other high smoke point cooking oil

3 green onions, including onion greens, sliced on the diagonal

1 Tbsp sesame seeds, toasted

Method

1 Marinate the shrimp: In a medium bowl whisk together the soy sauce, seasoned rice vinegar, and brown sugar until the sugar has dissolved. Then whisk in the olive oil, sesame oil, minced garlic, and grated ginger. Place the shrimp in the bowl with the marinade. Toss to coat with the marinade and chill until ready to cook.

2 Toast sesame seeds: If you haven't already done so, toast the sesame seeds in a small sauté pan on medium high heat until lightly browned.

3 Stir-fry shrimp and green onions: Heat cooking oil in a large stick-free sauté pan or wok (can use seasoned cast iron) on high heat. When the oil is shimmering hot, almost smoking, use a slotted spoon to move the shrimp from the marinade into the hot pan. (Watch out, it will splatter.) Stir-fry for a minute.

Add half of the sliced green onions. Continue to stir fry, turning the individual shrimp over if necessary, until the shrimp are pink and just cooked through. No more than 2 minutes max total cooking time, a minute on each side.

4 Reduce marinade: Remove shrimp from pan and transfer to a serving bowl. Place the remaining marinade in the hot sauté pan and simmer it until it has reduced to a syrup.

Hello! All photos and content are copyright protected. Please do not use our photos without prior written permission. If you wish to republish this recipe, please rewrite the recipe in your own unique words and link back to Ginger Sesame Garlic Shrimp on Simply Recipes. Thank you!

You may also like

Showing 4 of 21 Comments / Reviews

Donna

We made this tonight and found it too salty. I’m thinking I may have marinaded it too long. How long do you recommend? We mixed the shrimp with our Sesame noodles and that did tone down the saltiness. Next time, low salt soy and low salt rice vinegar. I may also up the brown sugar to match our noodle recipe.

March 16, 2017

Ann Satterthwaite

My daughter and I made this this evening and it was delicious. We wanted to use up some zucchini, so we started stir-frying them, and then followed the rest of the recipe. I did have to substitute dark soy for light, as I had run out of light, and the resulting sauce was Crazy salty! But oh, so good at the same time. I don’t know if it was the dark soy, or we might just use less soy sauce in the future. And we will make this in the future!

WoW I made this – but a bit different. No rice vinegar on hand used red wine and regular mixed. When I tasted the ‘broth’ before marinating it needed ‘something’ A bit of lime zest did the trick. OMWow just grilled a couple of the shrimp and cannot wait to do them all and put them on rice!! Awesome recipe

Ashley

I’m from Florida were we are blessed to have shrimp in abundance. Since the shrimp, I will be using is fresh and will be naturally salty, should alter soy sauce amount? Also, is the reduced sauce/marinade enough to coat the shrinp and some Japanese noodles mixed into the pan? Been craving some shrimp and Japanese noodles-thanks for this recipe!

Had this recipe in reserve since Fall and made it this evening. Outstanding!! Did use a little less soy sauce, and had to substitute Penzey’ s ground ginger for fresh. This is a dish ready for company!!